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Romance Roundup – Eloisa James Edition

August 25, 2015 |

An author whose writing is such that I will listen to her books despite a narrator I dislike is rare. Fortunately for me, Eloisa James is such an author. Most of her books are quite good, almost good enough that I can ignore the annoyances in the narration. Susan Duerden narrates all four of the books below, and while I’m sure many listeners quite enjoy her work (otherwise audiobook producers wouldn’t keep hiring her), she is distinctly not my cup of tea. Every line she reads comes out sing-song, like a teacher trying to get a student to understand the rhythm of iambic pentameter. Oh it is grating. But the books! They are almost all good. I love that many of her heroines have careers, or at least useful passions that occupy a lot of their time (one is a novelist, another is an interior designer) and that she incorporates real historical events into her novels – and not just passing mentions of big wars and the like. In fact, most of them include an author’s note where she expands upon what history is real and what history she tweaked for the purposes of her story. Historical romances with historical author’s notes are my jam.

three weeks with lady x james

Three Weeks With Lady X by Eloisa James

Lady Xenobia India is an interior designer, though she’s never referred to by that phrase (I’m assuming because such a thing didn’t really have a name at this point in time). She needed to find a way to to earn money after her parents died, and she has a knack for design and a way of transforming huge, run-down estates into gleaming, modern palaces. Her most recent client is Thorn Dautry, a bastard son of a duke who is in need of sprucing up his image so as to convince the stuck-up mother of the very respectable and sweet Leticia (who is dyslexic but merely thought to be stupid) that he should be allowed to marry her. Thorn has hired India to make over the estate he has purchased, which previously belonged to a man we’d call a party animal in this century. There are lots of leftover X-rated paintings and statuary, for example. The two strike up a flirtation which deepens into true friendship, and then into love. It’s a lovely progression that feels natural, and the bumps in their path to happily ever after are organic. There’s plenty of banter plus a really nice secondary love story between Leticia and another man, which makes the fact that Thorn pursued her and then fell in love with someone else a softer blow. The epilogue to this one even made me tear up a little.

four nights with the duke james

Four Nights With the Duke by Eloisa James

This one features a novelist as the heroine! When she was a child, Mia had a tremendous crush on Evander Brody and wrote a poem about him, which she meant to keep completely secret. Of course it didn’t remain that way, and Vander got a hold of it – or rather his friends did, and they teased him mercilessly about it. To save face, he mocked Mia in return, and of course she was there and overheard. Instant enmity. Flash forward a decade or so and Mia needs a husband for reasons too complicated to get into in this short review. But she doesn’t need just any husband – she needs to marry Vander. Not for long, just for a few weeks, and then she’ll secure an annulment. He’s hardly likely to marry her of his own volition – he’s holding out for a love match – so she blackmails him. Not a great start to a marriage. The premise is a bit contrived, but the emotions are genuine. James does a good job of bringing these two together in love when it seems like it wouldn’t ever be possible. Vander is angry, as he should be, and it provides a believable way for him to act like an asshole without actually being an asshole (unlike some other romance “heroes”). And Mia is awesome. Each chapter begins with her work-in-progress on her newest novel, which is giving her more than a bit of trouble. James drops a couple names of her own writer friends as Mia’s colleagues, and she provides an author’s note that describes in greater detail what the landscape for gothic romances like Mia’s were during that time. This is a love letter to romance novels – those from Mia’s time and those from our own.

duchess by night james

Duchess By Night by Eloisa James

Cross-dressing romances are usually pretty fun. Sarah MacLean did one of my favorites, Nine Rules to Break When Romancing a Rake, and I had high hopes for this one (especially after listening to James’ other books above). Harriet is a duchess, a widow whose husband killed himself after a bad game of chess (he loved chess more than he loved her). One of her husband’s responsibilities when he was alive was to help decide court cases, and now it’s fallen her to decide them – like that of a woman who had married five men consecutively and wasn’t quite sure which one was her legal husband. There’s a male judge there who is the “official” decider, but he’s drunk and passed out most of the time, and what she says goes. This is a really interesting bit of history that James elaborates upon in her author’s note, but it doesn’t have a huge amount to do with the romance (aside from character development, I suppose). Harriet is tired of being the staid widow and decides to have a little fun, which is where the cross-dressing comes in. She accompanies one of her female friends to the house of Julian Strange, a notorious partier. Her friend is female and dresses as such, but she decides to go as a man – the better to experience all that the party house has to offer, I suppose. Again, it’s pretty contrived, but it’s good fun. Strange is an OK hero, not terribly memorable but at least he’s not an asshole. When he discovers she’s a woman, it’s pretty funny (most of James’ novels have a good bit of humor in them). I didn’t enjoy this one quite as much as the previous two, but it was still a worthwhile read.

duke is  mine james

The Duke is Mine by Eloisa James

While the three novels above are all worth a read (and the first two are highly recommended), this one was a total dud. I love the concept of it – it’s a re-working of the Princess and the Pea – but the execution is terrible. I gave up about halfway through, and I never quite figured out exactly how it related to the fairy tale. Perhaps it would have become apparent later, but I wasn’t inclined to stick around long enough to find out. The heroine, Olivia, has been engaged to a man five years younger than her since his birth. Unfortunately, something happened during his birth that damaged his brain, and he never matured beyond the intellect and understanding of a child. Olivia isn’t thrilled to be marrying him, but she’s resigned to it. When her future father in law encourages them to consummate the relationship before her fiance goes off to war (because if she got pregnant the baby would be considered legitimate and he’d have an heir even though his son was dead, which seems specious to me), they both agree. The resulting scene is painful. And not in a funny awkward way. This man is 18 but acts like he’s 8 and he obviously can’t do anything in the bedroom. Just thinking about this scene makes me feel icky. But I persevered (why, I do not know), finally getting to the part where Olivia meets the hero. And he’s supremely boring and is bad at sex. I gave up.

All books borrowed from my local library.

Filed Under: Reviews, Romance

The Warrior, the Lover, and the Cultist: Three Brief Reviews

August 5, 2015 |

With the increased flexibility at my new job, I’ve had a lot more free time in the afternoons, which means I’ve been reading a lot more. In fact, over the past week, I’ve finished six whole books, which is quite a lot for me (and I’m well on my way to finishing the seventh, which would average a book a day). Aside from dedicating my newfound afternoon time to reading, I’ve also deliberately been eclectic in what I pick up. Two of those books have been romances, two of them graphic novels (one a memoir and one fiction), and two of them YA (a cult story and a thriller).




The Divine by Asaf Hanuka, Tomer Hanuka, and Boaz Lavie
The art in this – done by twins Asaf and Tomer Hanuka – is gorgeous, with really rich colors. The story it helps tell, though, isn’t well-crafted. It aims to be a sort of mish-mash of modern war story and ancient magic, but it comes off as kind of half-baked. It’s ostensibly about child soldiers in Thailand (the story takes place in a fictional Asian country called Quanlom), but I only knew that because of the creators’ afterword, which is a good deal more resonant than their story. The protagonist is kind of dull, his best friend is a caricature, and the central conflict about two twin Quanlom kids committing acts of violence for their country (helped along by some magical powers) never gels into anything meaningful. I wish I liked this one better; it’s a fine purchase for adult collections (for the art especially), but a bit of a letdown overall.

The Earl’s Mistress by Liz Carlyle
I read a lot of historical romance, and I enjoy pretty equally books that are on the tame side as well as those that are rather spicy. This one is definitely on the spicy side. It may be the spiciest historical romance I’ve yet read, which is saying something. Isabella Aldridge goes to interview for the position of governess with the Earl of Hepplewood, and he turns her down, but offers her a different role instead, which you can guess by the title of the book. He’s kind of skeezy in the beginning, and the book gives off a bit of a Fifty Shades vibe, though the earl isn’t really tortured like Christian is supposed to be. He gets better later in the story, and this isn’t the only historical romance guilty of making its hero a little too unlikeable at the beginning. The developing affection between the two leads is done well, though. The narration by Carolyn Morris is good and the book was enjoyable enough despite its flaws – I checked out a few others by Carlyle on its merits.

The Sacred Lies of Minnow Bly by Stephanie Oakes
Kelly reviewed this one not too long ago, which made me want to read it myself. So now you have two people (at least) telling you that it’s absolutely worth a read. I normally shy away from stories set primarily in prison, but this one wasn’t all about fights and how awful prison life is (which just makes me feel sad). It was a very personal story about Minnow and how she comes to terms with what happened with the cult and what she did to land herself in the detention center (refreshingly, she actually did do what she was convicted of doing, which we learn straight off). Minnow emerges at the end of the story a much stronger person with a stronger voice and a better understanding of what she wants from her life. What really made this story stand out for me, though, was the writing. I read a lot of YA books with fairly straightforward writing styles, good for much of the fast-paced action-oriented stories I enjoy. It was nice to read a book by an author who clearly enjoys playing with language – and is good at it – for a change.

Books received from the publisher, except for the Carlyle, which I borrowed from the library.

Filed Under: audio review, Graphic Novels, Reviews, Romance, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Fuzzy Mud by Louis Sachar

August 4, 2015 |

I received Louis Sachar’s latest middle grade, Fuzzy Mud, in the mail a couple weeks ago and deliberately read it before I looked up any professional reviews. It’s a given I would purchase it for my library, but I wanted to make up my mind as to its quality without other librarians telling me about it first. This is unusual for me since I normally read (or at least skim) a copious amount of reviews for every book I read before I dive in. But I’m glad I went into this one pretty blind. (In case you’d like to know now, it’s gotten positive reviews from all major trade journals, with a starred review from Booklist.)

My verdict: It’s good, but it’s not great. It’s going to be compared to Holes; of course it is. In comparison to that nearly perfect middle grade book, Fuzzy Mud is not quite as deftly plotted, its characters not as rich. It feels a little thin. Taken separately from Holes, it’s still a worthwhile read with a great middle grade voice, but even then, I wouldn’t call it a great book. It is a very good one, though.

Tamaya Dhilwaddi is in the 5th grade, and her mother forces her to walk to and from school with 7th-grader Marshall Walsh. They’re supposed to avoid the woods, but one day Marshall shoots right for it, telling Tamaya angrily that he knows a shortcut. Unbeknownst to her, Marshall is being bullied by Chad, another 7th grader, who has threatened to beat him up on his way home that day. Marshall hopes to avoid the bully, and he doesn’t particularly want to explain it to Tamaya, who rushes to keep up with him.

It turns out there’s a good reason to avoid the woods. Tamaya stumbles across something she can only call “fuzzy mud,” because that’s exactly what it looks like. And Chad finds them anyway. In their rush to escape the bully, Tamaya throws some of the fuzzy mud into Chad’s face. They go home and try to forget the incident – except Tamaya now has a strange rash that won’t go away.

As Tamaya’s rash worsens, the school notices that Chad hasn’t been seen in a while. Tamaya is stricken, knowing that while she just got some of the fuzzy mud on her hands, Chad got it in his face. Marshall won’t tell anyone that Chad is in the woods, but Tamaya knows she has to go see if he’s still there, if he’s still alive. By now, the school is on lockdown, but Tamaya manages to get away. This time, Marshall follows her.

The story is told from Tamaya’s and Marshall’s alternating points of view, though Tamaya’s is a bit more memorable. Interspersed are transcripts from a national hearing about the fuzzy mud, which takes place sometime after the other events of the book and show how catastrophically things escalated. There are also some ominous mathematical equations whose sums demonstrate the same thing in a different way. Both plot devices are well-used and very Louis Sachar.

Just what exactly the fuzzy mud is unravels over the course of this pretty short (under 200 pages) book. It’s a cool and somewhat unsettling concept having to do with clean energy and more broadly environmentalism and scarcity of resources – plus some animals rights issues, possibly, and the science of mutation. These are absolutely concepts kids can get, and placing them in the context of bullying and an adventure in the woods makes them digestible and interesting. The book has a dash of Wayside School since an understanding of exponents is essential to the story. It’s a slightly weird book (and a funny one), perhaps not as weird as Holes, but it has the same sort of flavor. It’s definitely a Sachar book, with writing that speaks well to a middle graders. He just knows how to write for this audience.

Where I felt a little let down was the overall thinness of the story. Middle grade books definitely don’t have to be (and most shouldn’t be) doorstoppers, but 192 pages feels not quite long enough to tell this story adequately. There are a lot of big ideas presented very quickly, particularly in the sections with the hearing/debriefing of the fuzzy mud incident. And because these sections split up the adventure in the woods at several points, Tamaya and Marshall’s story feels a bit scant, too. I felt that the bullying subplot with Chad was a little underdeveloped as well – its resolution felt too pat and a bit touchy-feely, with Chad’s about-face coming easily and quickly.

These weaknesses aside, this is a unique, fun, and interesting book for kids from a writer who excels at writing middle grade. There will be high demand and the concept should make it an easy sell.

Review copy received from the publisher. Fuzzy Mud publishes today.

Filed Under: middle grade, Reviews, Science Fiction, Uncategorized

Recent Reads: Immaculate by Katelyn Detweiler, Devoted by Jen Mathieu, and The Sacred Lies of Minnow Bly by Stephanie Oakes

June 11, 2015 |

I’ve read three really solid contemporary titles recently, and one of the really fascinating threads connecting them together, aside from strong, engaging lead females, is that they all deal with the idea of faith in some capacity. In one story, there’s a very loose take on the Virgin Mary story; the second story tackles a girl’s decision to leave the Quiverfull movement; and the third explores what happens when a girl decides that following the rules of the cult her family is a part of simply isn’t her destiny.

Immaculate by Katelyn Detweiler

I’ve read almost no reviews of this debut title, which came out last month, and I’m sad about that. While the book’s description lends itself to some immediate reactions — a teen girl is pregnant, despite being a virgin — this isn’t at all a morality tale or a story with a heavy religious hand in it. Rather, this is a book about faith, both in oneself and more, faith in other people.

When Mina discovers she’s pregnant following a very strange conversation with an old woman in the restaurant she works in, she doesn’t know what to do. How does she explain to her parents, to her best friends, and to her boyfriend that she’s pregnant, even though she’s never had sex? As she begins to tell them one by one, we see the ways people react to her story. Is she worth believing? Why would a girl lie about having sex when there’s clear-cut evidence that some sort of sexual intercourse happened resulting in a pregnancy?

This isn’t entirely a Virgin Mary spin, though that’s a bit of a jumping off point for Detweiler’s novel. In fact, there’s almost nothing about religion in here at all. It’s a solid story about how we do and do not believe girls when they tell us something. At the heart of this book, and the thing that really stood out for me, was how much there was about friendship. Mina’s two best friends have wildly different reactions to her pregnancy, and those divergent reactions are the heart of the idea of how we do and don’t listen, how we do and don’t believe, and how we do or don’t choose to have faith in another human being.

Immaculate does have an almost too perfect romance in it, but because I found the story was much less about love, much less about the pregnancy, and much less about anything other than girls’ stories, it didn’t clog up the storytelling nor weigh down the overarching themes. Likewise, readers who go into this one expecting resolution or explanation for the pregnancy may be disappointed. However, that would be the point — the faith you need to take in Mina and in Detweiler’s story. This is a longer book, but it’s fast-paced, the writing is solid, and the building of a small town scandal is executed well.

Devoted by Jennifer Mathieu

For her entire life, Rachel Walker has gone along with the beliefs of her large family, which is devoted to the teachings of the Calvary Christian Church. She’s never questioned it before; she dresses modestly, takes on much of the care of her siblings, and she believes her role as a woman in life is to become a wife and a mother.

The story picks up when Rachel begins to question the teachings of her family and her church — she becomes quickly intrigued by the story of a girl who had left the movement and began her own life. As Rachel begins to ask more questions about life outside of the church world, she’s less and less satisfied by the answers she’s given. So when she reaches out to the girl who left and finds herself wanting to know more and more and more, Rachel makes the decision to leave.

I devoured Mathieu’s novel, reading the entire book in about one sitting. As a long time fan of the Duggars (and, so it’s clear, one who stopped watching the show a while ago and finds the situation going on now to be entirely disgusting and unforgivable), I felt like Mathieu explored a part of the Quiverfull movement I’ve always been curious about. What happens if someone decides to leave? What could cause a person who’d been brought up in a very specific set of beliefs to want to consider other alternatives? Why do some people do this while the rest choose to stay?

Devoted isn’t about a “bad girl” who chooses to flee. It’s about a girl who is really good but is curious and wants to know the world beyond the bounds she’s grown up in. Mathieu is exceptionally respectful to the Quiverfull movement, though she allows her characters to dig into why some of the beliefs are problematic and damaging, especially to young girls. It’d be really interesting for a reader to pick this one up now in light of the Duggar molestation knowledge; I read it beforehand, and I suspect had I waited to read it, the story would take on an even harder edge to it in light of the power of girls in social worlds such as this. Readers who loved Carol Lynch Williams’s The Chosen One should pick this title up.

The Sacred Lies of Minnow Bly by Stephanie Oakes

Minnow Bly’s story begins bloody. She’s murdered — or at least attempted to murder — someone from the closed cult community of which she’s a part. But more than that, she tries to do it while being handless. Her hands had been cut off when she chose to disobey the leader of her cult who said it was the prophecy that she’d marry him.

Oakes’s book intrigued me from the start and held me through the entire read. What I went into it expecting was a cult story, and I got that. You learn the background and the things that led to the destruction of a cult in Montana. However, I wasn’t anticipating how much of the story would take place in a juvenile detention facility and . . . that took the story from being one that checked some of my boxes to one that highlighted each and every single one of them. In many strange ways, this book is reminiscent of Nova Ren Suma’s The Walls Around Us without any of the ballet or the magical realistic elements. But rather, it’s an exploration of the walls that keep us bound into behaving or acting in certain ways and about the world (in this case, a cult) that demands certain things from girls especially.

What made this book work for me was less the background and story of the cult. Readers who love that and love the world building surrounding a cult’s structure and purpose, as well as its rules and expectations will not be let down here. What did it for me, though, was Minnow’s relentless voice and pursuance of the things she wanted for herself. It was incredible to read a story about a handless girl and how damn determined she was to do every single thing for herself — and, as I think I’ve mentioned before, I’ve come to have a soft spot for books where a teenage girl takes on a grown man without hesitation. Because it’s not about the act of violence; it’s about the act of rebellion against those who so relentlessly want to keep you down, shut you up, and cut off the tools you have at your own disposal to fight back.

Oakes is a debut to keep an eye on. I’m so excited to see what she does next, as her style really meshed with my reading tastes.

All three of these books are worth shelf space, and all three would make for some interesting discussion alongside one another. While all of them feature “strong female characters,” the strength of these teen girls emerges in very distinct, very different manners that is worth talking about in and of itself. In some cases, it’s living with the choices you don’t have control over and in some, it’s about choosing to say to hell with those choices and striking out to begin anew, even though the future may be entirely unknown.

Review copies all received from the publishers. All three titles are available now. 

Filed Under: book reviews, Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult, young adult fiction

The Fixer by Jennifer Lynn Barnes

June 3, 2015 |

The Fixer is Jennifer Lynn Barnes’ YA answer to Scandal. Tess is the younger sister of a successful “fixer” in Washington, DC, Ivy (the Olivia Pope analogue), who takes Tess to live with her after their grandfather’s mental state deteriorates. Ivy is much older than Tess, and Tess is not thrilled to be uprooted from her grandfather’s farm and taken to live with the sister whom she feels abandoned her when their parents died many years ago.

Tess starts school at an elite private institution also attended by the children of politicians, dignitaries, and the very wealthy. She initially prefers to dissociate herself from her sister, but her classmates won’t let her. After she inadvertently helps the vice president’s daughter out of a tight spot, everyone seems to think that she’s a fixer in training.

While the book starts out by following Tess as she tries to avoid helping with her classmates’  problems, it quickly becomes more national in scale. Ivy tries to shield Tess from what she does, but Tess finds herself drawn into her sister’s problems and soon she’s caught up in a conspiracy involving the murder of a supreme court justice. More bodies join the first, and the suspect list includes the president of the United States.

This is a really fun political thriller just right for a teenage audience. The politics aren’t party vs. party and the book doesn’t really even broach touchy political issues like climate change or healthcare. The plot focuses more on politicians’ desire to acquire and then keep power, which is something anyone with a basic understanding of our political system can follow. You don’t need to be a fan of C-SPAN to know what’s going on, you just need to know that presidents appoint supreme court justices for life. This also means the book shouldn’t date too quickly.

At the same time, it’s not written down to the teenage readers either. The Goodreads synopsis initially led me to believe that Tess’ adventures would mostly be relegated to high school, but she actually ends up affecting events at the national level, and she has a great amount of agency outside the high school setting. This is not to say that Tess fixing her classmates’ problems wouldn’t have been enough to sustain a novel, but I think it’s very gratifying for teens to read about kids their age making an impact on a much larger scale. The plot is fast and the twists are many, and Barnes assumes her readers are smart enough to follow along.

The comparisons to Ally Carter’s Heist Society are apt, though the tone is a bit more serious, and the consequences are too. The best comparison really is the “meet” description provided by the publisher (and I don’t say that a lot) – Scandal meets Veronica Mars. I can’t say if today’s teens watch either of those shows, but the book’s got enough present-day teen appeal without the comparisons to be necessary anyway.

Review copy received at TLA. The Fixer will be published July 7.

Filed Under: Reviews, Uncategorized, young adult fiction

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